Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:T. Trnski)
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1L. A. Rocha ; A. Aleixo ; G. Allen ; F. Almeda ; C. C. Baldwin ; M. V. Barclay ; J. M. Bates ; A. M. Bauer ; F. Benzoni ; C. M. Berns ; M. L. Berumen ; D. C. Blackburn ; S. Blum ; F. Bolanos ; R. C. Bowie ; R. Britz ; R. M. Brown ; C. D. Cadena ; K. Carpenter ; L. M. Ceriaco ; P. Chakrabarty ; G. Chaves ; J. H. Choat ; K. D. Clements ; B. B. Collette ; A. Collins ; J. Coyne ; J. Cracraft ; T. Daniel ; M. R. de Carvalho ; K. de Queiroz ; F. Di Dario ; R. Drewes ; J. P. Dumbacher ; A. Engilis, Jr. ; M. V. Erdmann ; W. Eschmeyer ; C. R. Feldman ; B. L. Fisher ; J. Fjeldsa ; P. W. Fritsch ; J. Fuchs ; A. Getahun ; A. Gill ; M. Gomon ; T. Gosliner ; G. R. Graves ; C. E. Griswold ; R. Guralnick ; K. Hartel ; K. M. Helgen ; H. Ho ; D. T. Iskandar ; T. Iwamoto ; Z. Jaafar ; H. F. James ; D. Johnson ; D. Kavanaugh ; N. Knowlton ; E. Lacey ; H. K. Larson ; P. Last ; J. M. Leis ; H. Lessios ; J. Liebherr ; M. Lowman ; D. L. Mahler ; V. Mamonekene ; K. Matsuura ; G. C. Mayer ; H. Mays, Jr. ; J. McCosker ; R. W. McDiarmid ; J. McGuire ; M. J. Miller ; R. Mooi ; R. D. Mooi ; C. Moritz ; P. Myers ; M. W. Nachman ; R. A. Nussbaum ; D. O. Foighil ; L. R. Parenti ; J. F. Parham ; E. Paul ; G. Paulay ; J. Perez-Eman ; A. Perez-Matus ; S. Poe ; J. Pogonoski ; D. L. Rabosky ; J. E. Randall ; J. D. Reimer ; D. R. Robertson ; M. O. Rodel ; M. T. Rodrigues ; P. Roopnarine ; L. Ruber ; M. J. Ryan ; F. Sheldon ; G. Shinohara ; A. Short ; W. B. Simison ; W. F. Smith-Vaniz ; V. G. Springer ; M. Stiassny ; J. G. Tello ; C. W. Thompson ; T. Trnski ; P. Tucker ; T. Valqui ; M. Vecchione ; E. Verheyen ; P. C. Wainwright ; T. A. Wheeler ; W. T. White ; K. Will ; J. T. Williams ; G. Williams ; E. O. Wilson ; K. Winker ; R. Winterbottom ; C. C. Witt
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2014Staff ViewPublication Date: 2014-05-24Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; Biology/*methods ; Classification/*methods ; *Endangered Species ; *Extinction, BiologicalPublished by: -
2Staff View
ISSN: 1432-0975Keywords: Key words Fish larvae ; Dispersal ; Recruitment ; Coral reef lagoon ; Pelagic stageSource: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: BiologyGeosciencesNotes: Abstract Taiaro Atoll Lagoon is normally isolated from the ocean, but at least 125 marine fish species of 31 families are present there. We sampled fish larvae in Taiaro Lagoon and the nearby ocean in February 1994 with plankton net, neuston net and light trap to investigate which taxa were completing their life cycles in the lagoon. Concentrations of fish eggs and larvae were very high in the lagoon indicating intense spawning, but larvae of only 18 taxa of 10 families were present. Only six, a callionymid, gobiids, a hemiramphid, a microdesmid, and two pomacentrids, were present across a full range of pelagic sizes, and were clearly completing their pelagic stage in the lagoon. Four other taxa, an apogonid, two labrids and a scarid, were common, but the largest individuals were small (〈5 mm) postflexion larvae. These may have been completing their pelagic stage in the lagoon. The remaining lagoonal larvae (eight taxa) were rare and at the preflexion stage, so we could only conclude that they hatched from eggs spawned in the lagoon. Nineteen taxa of 15 families found as adults in the lagoon were present outside the lagoon as larvae, but not inside, suggesting that they may not normally complete their life cycles in the lagoon. Horizontal distributions of larvae in the lagoon are apparently due to the interaction of larval vertical distribution behaviour with a wind-driven countercurrent system.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: